Shop Hours
As of April 2012
Mon- Sat: 10 AM - 6 PM
Sun: Closed
242.5 Queen Street East
1 block east of Sherbourne 
M5A 1S3 Toronto, Ontario
416 | 546 2200

In partnership with

Who we are and what makes us different

Charlie's Freewheels is the only bicycle shop in the country providing employment, job training, and hope to young people. Our ten week program begins teaching basic bike mechanic skills by refurbishing a used bike. By the end these participants will have learnt bike safety skills, bike maintenance and be given the bike they worked on along with a lock and helmet. After graduation, we connect interested youth with paid cycling-related internship opportunities and involve them in determining the future direction of our organization.

Snowy Season Offer

Welcome to Charlie's Bike Shop!

Friday
Mar232012

Extra Extra: Bike Program Needs Bikes!

Stock photos? Oh yes, please.

As cheesy titles go, that is one of the more true and to-the-point ones. 

Yes, Charlie's Freewheels needs bikes, but the question is, why help? 

Chances are, there's a broken down old bike in your garage, or maybe several of them in your building storage. Rather than letting these things get thrown in the dump, why not save the world some time and let it go straight to the 'new bike' step of the process again?

What am I talking about? Well, again, chances are, if it goes to the dump or gets recycled, it's going to be scrap metal. Scrap metal gets sold and reused, and that will be reformed... yada yada metal for a new bike. Clearly, I haven't done thorough research in the whole recycling process. 

What's more important is that, you'll be helping kids like me, or rather, kids like who I was. It'll be three full years this coming summer since I built my bike. Sure, it was a useless-looking piece of frame, but it became a very useful tool in my life. As a student, and human being in general, I like saving money, which is why I'm extremely grateful as to how much Charlie's Freewheels helped me in this regard, and this isn't the only way that they have helped me. 

Yes, I have a sustainable, cheap, form of transportation which I enjoy using. It gets me from point A-B very quickly.

I have saved a lot of time and money going to and coming back from class. Either I would spend $3, and a lot of time waiting for the TTC, walk for about  thirty minutes, or bike for ten minutes. Biking would win every time. 

As for how else they have helped me: Well, I'm here now, dong something I enjoy. I went from being a fairly quiet and shy individual, to not as quiet and shy of an individual. The Charlie's Freewheels program showed me that it's okay to take chances, and in fact it's encouraged, because you never know what opportunities are waiting behind the door. I've gain so much experience, that I'm able to write down "Shop Administrator" and "Web Administrator" on my resume. They took chances with me, something that very few people would do.

I get compliments about the experience that I have on my resume, but the fact is, if CFW wasn't there, where would I have gotten it? 

How would you help a youth with that, just by donating a bike? You'll be apart of the process. You can say you'll be taking on a sort of Batman-esque or superhero persona where people wouldn't know who helped them. Heck, I don't know who donated my bike, the beauty that it has been rebuilt in to, but I still thank them. 

This will also help the folks at CFW concentrate and worry about other important stuff, like actualy getting youth since we have enough bikes for them to choose from.  

Of course, that isn't the only way you can help. If you don't have a bike to donate, you can do other things like helping with snacks or using your bike expertise to help youth. 

You can contact us using the contact form, or call the bike shop at (416) 546-2200, where you can leave your info so someone from the program can reach you.

 

Friday
Mar022012

Film & Food Fundraiser Part III

Charlie’s Bike Shop presents its THIRD Film-Food-Fundraiser event. This month we’re setting the table and screen with a Mexican spectacular, guaranteed to seduce all the senses! All proceeds from this event will go to Charlie’s youth bike programs.

WHEN: Friday March 2, 2012
Doors open: 6:45 pm
Food served: 7:15 pm
Film starts: 7:30 pm

WHERE: Charlie's Bike Shop
242 1/2 Queen Street East
416 546 2200

TICKETS: Tickets are pay what you can, with a suggested donation of 20$.

Please RSVP on facebook or by email at charliesbikeshop@gmail.com. We have approximately 30 spaces for dinner, and limited rush seats will also be available at the door. To the vegetarians: When RSVPing, please let us know if you are interested in the veggie sopa option – we need to make sure we have enough for all to enjoy!

Wheel Chair accessibility: There is one step at the door and the Washroom is located in the basement.

FILM: Like Water For Chocolate (1992), Produced and directed by Alfonso Arau

A funny, touching, sumptuous, and incredibly romantic ode to the joys of love and food.

An internationally popular romantic fable from Mexico which centers on a young woman who discovers that her cooking has magical effects. The tale's heroine, Tita, is the youngest of three daughters in a traditional Mexican family. Bound by tradition to remain unmarried while caring for her aging mother, Tita nevertheless falls in love with a handsome young man named Pedro. Pedro returns her affection, but he cannot overcome her family's disapproval, and he instead marries Tita's elder sister. The lovestruck young woman is brutally disappointed, and her sadness has such force that it infects her cooking: all who eat it her feel her heartbreak with the same intensity. This newly discovered power continues to manifest itself after the wedding, as Tita and Pedro, overcome by their denied love, embark on a secret affair. (http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/like_water_for_chocolate/)

FEAST: Main Course: Sopa Azteca (Aztec Soup) – an authentic Mexican soup with a long-simmered smoked pepper broth, garnished with avocado, Oaxaca cheese, crema, and topped with fried tortilla and pasillia pepper bits (chicken and vegetarian options available, please specify if veg)

Dessert: Fresh Churros – mmmmm!

Drink: Horchata Cash bar

Friday
Mar022012

That's How I Lost All My Hair

Jane sent me this picture via email today. Lovely, isn't it?

When working in a bike shop, you run in to a lot of interesting people and things. I already made a post about things I learned by working at our shop. 

Another thing I learned is that, the bike world is an entirely different one. When you hang around with bikers, work in a bike shop, bike everywhere, it feels like you've stepped in to a portal and entered a different dimension. Drivers hate you (usually), and you (at least I do) feel like a healthier individual who's living a cleaner lifestyle. Walking feels too cumbersome and time-consuming after this. It takes a lot to get back in to walking, because I used to enjoy doing that a lot before. 

What interesting thing did our mechanic, Jane, find? Hair. She found hair in, and interestingly enough, the freewheel of a bike. As she tells me, it's a rite of passage to find it there.

 

Friday
Feb172012

Cars Kill Cities 

This article is three weeks old. I read it when it was posted, and I happened to remember it. 

Last week I spoke about our transportation infrastructure and roads. The article I shared in the link above shows how much of an impact cars have. If you don't have time to read through it, or are too lazy to do so, just look at this picture: 

 

60 Cars, 60 Bike Riders, and 60 Bus Passengers in Munster, Germany.

Last week, I spoke about how terrible our transportation infrastrucutre and roads are. 

There's little to entice someone to use a bicycle as a mode of transportation. Would you rather be stuffed up in a streetcar or bus, when it's going as slow as the traffic around it? Or would you rather be trapped in a car which has comfortable seating, AC, heating, radio, and the ability to run others over? 

How about being on a bike, riding on a narrow strip of road on Dundas in between the sidewalk and cars? 

I won't talk about it again since I already did.

How's this for a solution: Hover bikes? Anyone? 

Friday
Feb102012

This Week in the Bike World

Let's face it, with school and my other hobbies, I'm not as involved in the bike world as I used to be. Luckily, Ibiketo.ca has wonderful updates.

What happened this week?

New Trails Proposal 

While it's fantastic that we are getting more trails, we do need more bike lanes. 

Herb says in the article "In fact, the mayor has supposedly scrapped the Bike Plan because he claims that the roads are no place for bikes (or streetcars for that matter)."

I actually spoke to Gideon (one of our mechanics) about the transportation infrastructure in Toronto. I went to New York City several months ago and was astounded to see how well developed, despite their population, the infrastructure is. It turns out that the planners had great foresight, and knew the city would grow. 

Mayor Ford comes from the suburbs, where, as I've noticed, most services and stores are further apart than they are in Toronto. In downtown though, cars aren't as effective. Our roads do not have enough lanes, and streetcars on major streets like Queen, Dundas and College, take up a lot of room. Throw in the fact that parking is expensive, taking a car downtown for something like going to work, or shopping alone or with one other person for a few small items does not make sense. 

My idea? Well, not that anyone asked, but how about more one-way roads? I bike on Richmond and Adelaide to get to and back from College, and I love it. The traffic is much more fluid, although as a biker it wouldn't matter too much. Making left-turns, are much easier though. 

As for streets that have streetcars, if Dundas just went, lets say, West, and Queen ran East, you could have one lane for the streetcar. That way, the two left-most lanes are unhindered.

Bike Around the World

This isn't exactly weekly news, but something I found. I wasn't born when Vladislav Ketov started this journey, so I haven't heard of it.

Well, I found it, and if you haven't heard of it, look into it!